The Duke in His Study
It was natural that at such a time,
when success greater than had been expected had attended
the efforts of the Liberals, when some dozen unexpected
votes had been acquired, the leading politicians of
that party should have found themselves compelled to
look about them and see how these good things might
be utilised. In February they certainly had not
expected to be called to power in the course of the
existing Session. Perhaps they did not expect
it yet. There was still a Conservative majority, though
but a small majority. But the strength of the
minority consisted, not in the fact that the majority
against them was small, but that it was decreasing.
How quickly does the snowball grow into hugeness as
it is rolled on, but when the change comes
in the weather how quickly does it melt, and before
it is gone become a thing ugly, weak, and formless!
Where is the individual who does not assert to himself
that he would be more loyal to a falling than to a
rising friend? Such is perhaps the nature of
each one of us. But when any large number of men
act together, the falling friend is apt to be deserted.
There was a general feeling among politicians that
Lord Drummond’s ministry, or Sir
Timothy’s was failing, and the Liberals,
though they could not yet count the votes by which
they might hope to be supported in power, nevertheless
felt that they ought to be looking to their arms.
There had been a coalition. They
who are well read in the political literature of their
country will remember all about that. It had
perhaps succeeded in doing that for which it had been
intended. The Queen’s government had been
carried on for two or three years. The Duke of
Omnium had been the head of that Ministry; but
during those years had suffered so much as to have
become utterly ashamed of the coalition, so
much as to have said often to himself that under no
circumstances would he again join any Ministry.
At this time there was no idea of another coalition.
That is a state of things which cannot come about
frequently, which can only be reproduced
by men who have never hitherto felt the mean insipidity
of such a condition. But they who had served
on the Liberal side in that coalition must again put
their shoulders to the wheel. Of course it was
in every man’s mouth that the Duke must be induced
to forget his miseries and once more to take upon
himself the duties of an active servant of the State.
But they who were most anxious on
the subject, such men as Lord Cantrip, Mr. Monk, our
old friend Phineas Finn, and a few others, were almost
afraid to approach him. At the moment when the
coalition was broken up he had been very bitter in
spirit, apparently almost arrogant, holding himself
aloof from his late colleagues, and since
that, troubles had come to him, which had aggravated
the soreness of his heart. His wife had died,
and he had suffered much through his children.
What Lord Silverbridge had done at Oxford was matter
of general conversation, and also what he had not
done.
That the heir of the family should
have become a renegade in politics was supposed greatly
to have affected the father. Now Lord Gerald had
been expelled from Cambridge, and Silverbridge was
on the turf in conjunction with Major Tifto!
Something, too, had oozed out into general ears about
Lady Mary, something which should have been
kept secret as the grave. It had therefore come
to pass that it was difficult even to address the
Duke.
There was one man, and but one, who
could do this with ease to himself; and
that man was at last put into motion at the instance
of the leaders of the party. The old Duke of St.
Bungay wrote the following letter to the Duke of Omnium.
The letter purported to be an excuse for the writer’s
own defalcation. But the chief object of the
writer was to induce the younger Duke once more to
submit to harness.
Longroyston, 3rd June, 187 .
Dear duke of omnium,
How quickly the things come round!
I had thought that I should never again have been
called upon even to think of the formation of another
Liberal Ministry; and now, though it was but yesterday
that we were all telling ourselves that we were
thoroughly manumitted from our labours by the altered
opinions of the country, sundry of our old friends
are again putting their heads together.
Did they not do so they would neglect
a manifest duty. Nothing is more essential
to the political well-being of the country than
that the leaders on both sides in politics should
be prepared for their duties. But for myself,
I am bound at last to put in the old plea with a
determination that it shall be respected. “Solve
senescentem.” It is now, if I calculate
rightly, exactly fifty years since I first entered
public life in obedience to the advice of Lord
Grey. I had then already sat five years in
the House of Commons. I assisted humbly in the
emancipation of the Roman Catholics, and have learned
by the legislative troubles of just half a century
that those whom we then invited to sit with us
in Parliament have been in all things our worst
enemies. But what then? Had we benefited
only those who love us, would not the sinners also, or
even the Tories, have done as much as that?
But such memories are of no avail now.
I write to say that after so much of active political
life, I will at last retire. My friends when
they see me inspecting a pigsty or picking a peach
are apt to remind me that I can still stand on
my legs, and with more of compliment than of kindness
will argue therefore that I ought still to undertake
active duties in Parliament. I can select my
own hours for pigs and peaches, and should I, through
the dotage of age, make mistakes as to the breeding
of the one or the flavour of the other, the harm
done will not go far. In politics I have done
my work. What you and others in the arena
do will interest me more than all other things
of this world, I think and hope, to my dying day.
But I will not trouble the workers with the querulousness
of old age.
So much for myself. And now let
me, as I go, say a parting word to him with whom
in politics I have been for many years more in
accord than with any other leading man. As nothing
but age or infirmity would to my own mind have justified
me in retiring, so do I think that you, who can plead
neither age nor infirmity, will find yourself at last
to want self-justification, if you permit yourself
to be driven from the task either by pride or by
indifference.
I should express my feelings better were
I to say by pride and diffidence. I look to
our old friendship, to the authority given to me
by my age, and to the thorough goodness of your
heart for pardon in thus accusing you. That
little men should have ventured to ill-use you, has
hurt your pride. That these little men should
have been able to do so has created your diffidence.
Put you to a piece of work that a man may do, you
have less false pride as to the way in which you
may do it than any man I have known; and, let the
way be open to you, as little diffidence as any.
But in this political mill of ours in England,
a man cannot always find the way open to do things.
It does not often happen that an English statesman
can go in and make a great score off his own bat.
But not the less is he bound to play the game and
to go to the wicket when he finds that his time
has come.
There are, I think, two things for you
to consider in this matter, and two only.
The first is your capacity, and the other is your
duty. A man may have found by experience that
he is unfitted for public life. You and I have
known men in regard to whom we have thoroughly
wished that such experience had been reached.
But this is a matter in which a man who doubts
himself is bound to take the evidence of those
around him. The whole party is most anxious for
your co-operation. If this be so, and
I make you the assurance from most conclusive evidence, you
are bound to accept the common consent of your
political friends on that matter. You perhaps
think that at a certain period of your life you
failed. They all agree with me that you did not
fail. It is a matter on which you should be
bound by our opinion rather than by your own.
As to that matter of duty I shall have
less difficulty in carrying you with me. Though
this renewed task may be personally disagreeable
to you, even though your tastes should lead you
to some other life, which I think is not
the case, still if your country wants
you, you should serve your country. It is
a work as to which such a one as you has no option.
Of most of those who choose public life, it
may be said that were they not there, there would
be others as serviceable. But when a man such
as you has shown himself to be necessary, as long
as health and age permit he cannot recede without
breach of manifest duty. The work to be done
is so important, the numbers to be benefited are
so great, that he cannot be justified in even remembering
that he has a self.
As I have said before, I trust that my
own age and your goodness will induce you to pardon
this great interference. But whether pardoned
or not I shall always be
Your most affectionate friend,
St. Bungay.
The Duke, our Duke, on
reading this letter was by no means pleased by its
contents. He could ill bear to be reminded either
of his pride or of his diffidence. And yet the
accusations which others made against him were as
nothing to those with which he charged himself.
He would do this till at last he was forced to defend
himself against himself by asking himself whether
he could be other than as God had made him. It
is the last and the poorest makeshift of a defence
to which a man can be brought in his own court!
Was it his fault that he was so thin-skinned that
all things hurt him? When some coarse man said
to him that which ought not to have been said, was
it his fault that at every word a penknife had stabbed
him? Other men had borne these buffets without
shrinking, and had shown themselves thereby to be
more useful, much more efficacious; but he could no
more imitate them than he could procure for himself
the skin of a rhinoceros or the tusk of an elephant.
And this shrinking was what men called pride, was
the pride of which his old friend wrote! “Have
I ever been haughty, unless in my own defence?”
he asked himself, remembering certain passages of
humility in his life, and certain passages
of haughtiness also.
And the Duke told him also that he
was diffident. Of course he was diffident.
Was it not one and the same thing? The very pride
of which he was accused was no more than that shrinking
which comes from the want of trust in oneself.
He was a shy man. All his friends and all his
enemies knew that; it was thus that he still
discoursed with himself; a shy, self-conscious,
timid, shrinking, thin-skinned man! Of course
he was diffident. Then why urge him on to tasks
for which he was by nature unfitted?
And yet there was much in his old
friend’s letter which moved him. There
were certain words which he kept on repeating to himself.
“He cannot be justified in even remembering
that he has a self.” It was a hard thing
to say of any man, but yet a true thing of such a man
as his correspondent had described. His correspondent
had spoken of a man who should know himself to be
capable of serving the State. If a man were capable,
and was sure within his own bosom of his own capacity,
it would be his duty. But what if he were not
so satisfied? What if he felt that any labours
of his would be vain, and all self-abnegation useless?
His friend had told him that on that matter he was
bound to take the opinion of others. Perhaps so.
But if so, had not that opinion been given to him
very plainly when he was told that he was both proud
and diffident? That he was called upon to serve
his country by good service, if such were within his
power, he did acknowledge freely; but not that he
should allow himself to be stuck up as a ninepin only
to be knocked down! There are politicians for
whom such occupation seems to be proper; and
who like it too. A little office, a little power,
a little rank, a little pay, a little niche in the
ephemeral history of the year will reward many men
adequately for being knocked down.
And yet he loved power, and even when
thinking of all this allowed his mind from time to
time to run away into a dreamland of prosperous political
labours. He thought what it would be to be an
all-beneficent Prime Minister, with a loyal majority,
with a well-conditioned unanimous cabinet, with a
grateful people, and an appreciative Sovereign.
How well might a man spend himself night and day,
even to death, in the midst of labours such as these.
Half an hour after receiving the Duke’s
letter he suddenly jumped up and sat himself down
at his desk. He felt it to be necessary that he
should at once write to his old friend; and
the more necessary that he should do so at once, because
he had resolved that he would do so before he had
made up his mind on the chief subject of that letter.
It did not suit him to say either that he would or
that he would not do as his friend advised him.
The reply was made in a very few words. “As
to myself,” he said, after expressing his regret
that the Duke should find it necessary to retire from
public life “as to myself, pray understand
that whatever I may do I shall never cease to be grateful
for your affectionate and high-spirited counsels.”
Then his mind recurred to a more immediate
and, for the moment, a heavier trouble. He had
as yet given no answer to that letter from Mrs. Finn,
which the reader will perhaps remember. It might
indeed be passed over without an answer; but to him
that was impossible. She had accused him in the
very strongest language of injustice, and had made
him understand that if he were unjust to her, then
would he be most ungrateful. He, looking at the
matter with his own lights, had thought that he had
been right, but had resolved to submit the question
to another person. As judge in the matter he had
chosen Lady Cantrip, and Lady Cantrip had given judgment
against him.
He had pressed Lady Cantrip for a
decided opinion, and she had told him that she, in
the same position, would have done just as Mrs. Finn
had done. He had constituted Lady Cantrip his
judge, and had resolved that her judgment should be
final. He declared to himself that he did not
understand it. If a man’s house be on fire,
do you think of certain rules of etiquette before
you bid him send for the engines? If a wild beast
be loose, do you go through some ceremony before you
caution the wanderers abroad? There should not
have been a moment! But, nevertheless, it was
now necessary that he should conform himself to the
opinion of Lady Cantrip, and in doing so he must apologise
for the bitter scorn with which he had allowed himself
to treat his wife’s most loyal and loving friend.
The few words to the Duke had not
been difficult, but this letter seemed to be an Herculean
task. It was made infinitely more difficult by
the fact that Lady Cantrip had not seemed to think
that this marriage was impossible. “Young
people when they have set their minds upon it do so
generally prevail at last!” These had been her
words, and they discomforted him greatly. She
had thought the marriage to be possible. Had
she not almost expressed an opinion that they ought
to be allowed to marry? And if so, would it not
be his duty to take his girl away from Lady Cantrip?
As to the idea that young people, because they have
declared themselves to be in love, were to have just
what they wanted, with that he did not agree
at all. Lady Cantrip had told him that young
people generally did prevail at last. He knew
the story of one young person, whose position in her
youth had been very much the same as that of his daughter
now, and she had not prevailed. And in her case
had not the opposition which had been made to her
wishes been most fortunate? That young person
had become his wife, his Glencora, his Duchess.
Had she been allowed to have her own way when she
was a child, what would have been her fate? Ah
what! Then he had to think of it all. Might
she not have been alive now, and perhaps happier than
she had ever been with him? And had he remained
always unmarried, devoted simply to politics, would
not the troubles of the world have been lighter on
him? But what had that to do with it? In
these matters it was not the happiness of this or
that individual which should be considered. There
is a propriety in things; and only by an
adherence to that propriety on the part of individuals
can the general welfare be maintained. A King
in this country, or the heir or the possible heir
to the throne, is debarred from what might possibly
be a happy marriage by regard to the good of his subjects.
To the Duke’s thinking the maintenance of the
aristocracy of the country was second only in importance
to the maintenance of the Crown. How should the
aristocracy be maintained if its wealth were allowed
to fall into the hands of an adventurer!
Such were the opinions with regard
to his own order of one who was as truly Liberal in
his ideas as any man in England, and who had argued
out these ideas to their consequences. As by the
spread of education and increase of general well-being
every prolétaire was brought nearer to a Duke,
so by such action would the Duke be brought nearer
to a prolétaire. Such drawing-nearer of the
classes was the object to which all this man’s
political action tended. And yet it was a dreadful
thing to him that his own daughter should desire to
marry a man so much beneath her own rank and fortune
as Frank Tregear.
He would not allow himself to believe
that the young people could ever prevail; but nevertheless,
as the idea of the thing had not alarmed Lady Cantrip
as it had him, it was necessary that he should make
some apology to Mrs. Finn. Each moment of procrastination
was a prick to his conscience. He now therefore
dragged out from the secrecy of some close drawer
Mrs. Finn’s letter and read it through to himself
once again. Yes it was true that he
had condemned her, and that he had punished her.
Though he had done nothing to her, and said nothing,
and written but very little, still he had punished
her most severely.
She had written as though the matter
was almost one of life and death to her. He could
understand that too. His uncle’s conduct
to this woman, and his wife’s, had created the
intimacy which had existed. Through their efforts
she had become almost as one of the family. And
now to be dismissed, like a servant who had misbehaved
herself! And then her arguments in her own defence
were all so good, if only that which Lady
Cantrip had laid down as law was to be held as law.
He was aware now that she had had no knowledge of
the matter till his daughter had told her of the engagement
at Matching. Then it was evident also that she
had sent this Tregear to him immediately on her return
to London. And at the end of the letter she accused
him of what she had been pleased to call his usual
tenacity in believing ill of her! He had been
obstinate, too obstinate in this respect,
but he did not love her the better for having told
him of it.
At last he did put his apology into words.
My dear Mrs. Finn,
I believe I had better acknowledge to
you at once that I have been wrong in my judgment
as to your conduct in a certain matter. You
tell me that I owe it to you to make this acknowledgment, and
I make it. The subject is, as you may imagine,
so painful that I will spare myself, if possible,
any further allusion to it. I believe I did you
a wrong, and therefore I write to ask your pardon.
I should perhaps apologise also
for delay in my reply. I
have had much to think of in this
matter, and have many
others also on my mind.
Believe me to be,
Yours faithfully,
Omnium.
It was very short, and as being short
was infinitely less troublesome at the moment than
a fuller epistle; but he was angry with himself, knowing
that it was too short, feeling that it was ungracious.
He should have expressed a hope that he might soon
see her again, only he had no such wish.
There had been times at which he had liked her, but
he knew that he did not like her now. And yet
he was bound to be her friend! If he could only
do some great thing for her, and thus satisfy his
feeling of indebtedness towards her! But all the
favours had been from her to him and his.